Clouds Across Matrices
It’s aimed high. But will stronger regional air connectivity actually work?
It’s aimed high. But will stronger regional air connectivity actually work?
RK Nagar leaves a dirty spot on Tamil Nadu’s poll scene, signalling it’s all about power to the moneybags
How Dawaram- a Tamil Nadu Cop- exploited a lack of unity among the Naxals, thus succeeding in targeting uncompromising leaders...
‘Fight the guerrilla like a guerrilla’—the anti-Maoist GreyHounds do what it takes
Actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui tallks about the processes that an actor must go through, his choices ranging from small films like Haramkhor to a lavish series with BBC...
Left-wing extremism is on the decline, but any let-up in counter-insurgency may see it re-emerge stronger
A close-knit constellation of Maoists, resisting an imperialist state, will make the New Democratic Revolution a reality. Naxalbari guides them like a lodestar.
Reason, argument and a story—mapping the evocative and agitated contours of Naxalite imagination in Indian Cinema
For decades, the shirtless bard’s stirring songs lent punch to a class struggle. Gaddar may carry on singing, but his opting to be a voter implies the mutation of a rebel note.
Fighting ‘pro-capitalist’ Marxists on the political turf, the CM knows she can’t displease the state’s ultra Left
RK Nagar leaves a dirty spot on Tamil Nadu’s poll scene, signalling it’s all about power to the moneybags
How Dawaram- a Tamil Nadu Cop- exploited a lack of unity among the Naxals, thus succeeding in targeting uncompromising leaders...
‘Fight the guerrilla like a guerrilla’—the anti-Maoist GreyHounds do what it takes
Actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui tallks about the processes that an actor must go through, his choices ranging from small films like Haramkhor to a lavish series with BBC...
Left-wing extremism is on the decline, but any let-up in counter-insurgency may see it re-emerge stronger
A close-knit constellation of Maoists, resisting an imperialist state, will make the New Democratic Revolution a reality. Naxalbari guides them like a lodestar.
Reason, argument and a story—mapping the evocative and agitated contours of Naxalite imagination in Indian Cinema
For decades, the shirtless bard’s stirring songs lent punch to a class struggle. Gaddar may carry on singing, but his opting to be a voter implies the mutation of a rebel note.
Fighting ‘pro-capitalist’ Marxists on the political turf, the CM knows she can’t displease the state’s ultra Left
It’s not the 1960s, but radical students’ groups are still a thorn in the establishment’s side
On Naxalbari movement's 50th anniversary, Presidency college's former student recalls those tumultuous days...
Three men fired up by Naxalism in the 1970s are just detached watchers now
Former Naxalite Ashim Chatterjee looks back at the rebellion that made him
From a 1967 peasant uprising in the rural Bengal enclave of Naxalbari— hence, Naxalites — the Maoist movement still rages on. To most Indians, Naxalites are rebels confined to jungles. For the government, they represent the most potent threat to the state. The Maoists control a ‘red’ corridor, spanning India’s poorest states. It’s been a long, bloody battle
Naxalbari’s quixotic battle-cry—for the landless, indeed all oppressed—rang out in a global ecosystem of unrest. Its shards still lie embedded in the shifting forms of dissent.
Shoddy clean-up of a 12th-C shrine digs up artefacts. Some have been damaged.
The 50th anniversary of the Naxalbari uprising offers us an opportunity to look in the rearview mirror and ask: did they all die in vain?
The seven per cent turnout in the Srinagar bypoll marks a new low for Kashmir’s pro-India parties
Tackling depression in new-age India calls for acceptance and unique solutions
In his long innings with the BCCI, Sitaram Tambe has been the in-transit custodian of trophies
In nearly two decades, Ashish Nehra has made repeated comebacks from injuries on the back of an iron will. The world’s oldest pacer is still running in.